no
No, not in water. Gold is very dense. However, if you found a liquid that is more dense than gold, at a temperature that would not melt the gold, then the gold would indeed float in it.
Yes.
The gold. The mass per unit volume of the gold will be much higher.
very very dense :)
The more dense its one kilogram of silver and the more better in durability and color it's solid white gold!
Silver is less dense than gold! Pure silver has a density of 10.49 g·cm−3 whereas gold has density of 19.30 g·cm−3 The principal reason why gold is more dense is that the atoms are much heavier. Silver has an atomic weight of 107.9 , gold has an atomic weight of 196.97.
The density of gold is 19.3 g/cm^3 while the density of silver is 10.5 g/cm^3. Therefore gold is more dense than silver, so gold weighs more than an equal volume of silver.
silver
Yes, gold is more dense than the silver. Gold's density near room temperature (range of 22 ºC (71.6 ºF) to 28°C (82.4 °F)) is 19.3  g·cm−3 while silver's density near room temperature is 10.49  g·cm−3.
A pound of gold weighs the same as a pound of silver, because they are both one pound. But a block of gold would weigh more than the same-sized block of silver (gold is more dense than silver, so a smaller volume weighs the same).
cuz their dense
Gold is the most dense of these elements
No, gold is much more dense that aluminum.
no
If you think to density gold is more dense.
Mercury is more dense than silver.